A curated list of Symfony educational resources including articles, series, books, and tutorials for developers.
Awesome Symfony Education is a curated collection of high-quality learning resources for the Symfony PHP framework. It compiles articles, tutorials, video courses, books, and series from the Symfony community to help developers master Symfony concepts and best practices. The project serves as a centralized reference for educational materials, excluding Symfony bundles which are covered in a separate repository.
PHP developers learning or working with the Symfony framework, from beginners seeking tutorials to experienced developers looking for advanced patterns and optimization techniques.
Developers choose this resource because it saves time by providing a vetted, organized collection of quality Symfony educational content in one place, eliminating the need to search through scattered sources across the web.
Useful sources around Symfony - articles, series and books (not Bundles)
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Emphasizes high-value resources selected by the community, saving time from sifting through low-quality materials, as stated in the philosophy focusing on quality over quantity.
Resources are categorized by Symfony components like Security, Forms, and Doctrine, plus advanced topics such as DDD and legacy migration, making it easy to find specific learning materials.
Includes video courses, screencasts, and slides alongside articles, such as SymfonyCasts tutorials, catering to different learning styles beyond just text.
Offers resources for all skill levels, from series for beginners like 'Symfony po krůčkách' to advanced patterns like decoupling strategies, ensuring broad utility.
Many links are from 2013-2017, with no clear indication of Symfony version compatibility, risking outdated advice for current projects like Symfony 4 or 5.
Only provides passive learning through articles and videos; missing code exercises, labs, or quizzes that reinforce practical application.
Excludes Symfony bundles entirely, directing users to another repository, which limits its usefulness for developers seeking package-based solutions.